Skip to main content

New Mersey gateway bridge project underway

Work is starting on the approach viaducts for the new Mersey Gateway Bridge in the UK. The project is using longest bridge-building machine in Europe, which was named during a ceremony to mark the latest key stage the Mersey Gateway Project. Most machines of this kind can only build bridge spans of up to 60m. However, the MSS for the Mersey Gateway Bridge was specially made so it is able to cast spans of up to 70m.
September 23, 2015 Read time: 2 mins
The Mersey Gateway is a key project for the area
Work is starting on the approach viaducts for the new 6126 Mersey Gateway Bridge in the UK. The project is using longest bridge-building machine in Europe, which was named during a ceremony to mark the latest key stage the Mersey Gateway Project. Most machines of this kind can only build bridge spans of up to 60m. However, the MSS for the Mersey Gateway Bridge was specially made so it is able to cast spans of up to 70m.

It has taken construction teams three months to assemble the machine. This is no mean feat considering it includes approximately 1,200 components, 3,000 actual parts, and is held together by over 60,000 bolts. Now fully built, the MSS measures an impressive 157m long and weighs around 1,700tonnes. The MSS will now build the elevated road viaducts over the Mersey Estuary on both sides of the river, beginning with the north approach viaduct from the launch site at Catalyst Trade Park in Widnes.

The construction consortium Merseylink named the movable scaffolding system (MSS) at a special launching event at Catalyst Trade Park in Widnes. Merseylink held a competition for staff to name the MSS, with the winning name ‘Trinity' submitted by Lynn Jeary, who works in the project's communications team. The name Trinity symbolises the three bridge pylons as well as the three partners in the construction joint venture - Kier Infrastructure and Overseas Limited, Samsung C&T Corporation and FCC Construcción. The name also refers to the Merseylink bridge being sponsored by three major companies - Macquarie Capital, BBGI, and FCC.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • River Mersey second bridge?
    July 12, 2012
    The inquiry into plans to build a second bridge across the River Mersey is underway in the UK. When complete, the €490 million, 1km long Mersey Gateway toll crossing will link Runcorn and Widnes in County Cheshire to ease congestion on the existing Silver Jubilee Bridge. The plans for the six-lane bridge were submitted in 2008 and the crossing is expected to help create thousands of jobs. However opponents of the scheme claim that tolls planned for both bridges would cast an economic blight across the area
  • Residents near Mersey Gateway Bridge to get up to 300 free journeys a year
    December 12, 2013
    Halton Borough Council has revealed that all eligible residents within the North West England borough will receive up to 300 free journeys per year when the new Mersey Gateway Bridge between Runcorn and Widnes and the current Silver Jubilee Bridge become tolled in 2017. The scheme, expected to revitalise an area hit hard by the ongoing tough European economic climate, was approved at a full Halton Borough Council meeting last night (11 December 2013).
  • Mersey Gateway makes key report’s top 100 global infrastructures
    July 6, 2012
    The Mersey Gateway project has been named as one of the world's most important infrastructure projects by an influential new report. The KMPG Infrastructure 100: World Cities Edition, recognises inventive and well-designed infrastructure projects from cities around the world, and has included the project as an example in innovation an impact on society. The 1km bridge over the River Mersey aims to relieve the pressure from the Silver Jubilee Bridge, and reduce journey times in peak periods.
  • Mersey river toll bridge gets the go ahead
    February 21, 2012
    Mersey Gateway backers have hailed the UK government’s decision to give the project planning approval as “fantastic news”.